@mozzadrella@ccannon94 Could you provide some clarifications about what “You hereby grant GitHub a non-exclusive, irrevocable, perpetual, royalty-free, worldwide license to make, have made, use, offer to sell, sell, import, copy, modify, create derivative works based upon, distribute, sublicense, display, perform and transmit any work product you create in connection with the Program, including, without limitation, concepts, works, inventions, information, drawings, designs, programs, or software.” entails (emphasis mine)? Does it pertains to the code pushed on Github or also to, say, the questions that the students answer by writing code, or a program that I could make to fetch students repositories and automatically correct them?

I would just like to thank the team for creating such great content! I happen to be lucky enough to have @ccannon94 on my campus and met with him prior to the completion of my training. Thank you @ccannon94 for encouraging me to use github in the classroom and to complete this training!

@mozzadrella@ccannon94 Could you provide some clarifications about what “You hereby grant GitHub a non-exclusive, irrevocable, perpetual, royalty-free, worldwide license to make, have made, use, offer to sell, sell, import, copy, modify, create derivative works based upon, distribute, sublicense, display, perform and transmit any work product you create in connection with the Program, including, without limitation, concepts, works, inventions, information, drawings, designs, programs, or software.” entails (emphasis mine)? Does it pertains to the code pushed on Github or also to, say, the questions that the students answer by writing code, or a program that I could make to fetch students repositories and automatically correct them?

I am not aware of what happens, but apparently no one reported reception of his/her certificate since December. I got a response from GitHub that the person in charge of certificates is on medical leave.